A survey assessing the impact of symptoms related to the menstrual cycle and perceptions of workplace productivity: considerations for employer-sponsored menstrual health programs.

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q2 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Danielle M Raves, Wynetta D Herrera, Matthew E Darnell, Tristan Rice, Craig Friedman, Stephanie C Moratti, Stacy T Sims, Wandasun B Sihanath, Shannon N Ehrhardt, Amanda Phillips
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Hormonal-related symptoms experienced during natural or contraceptive-driven menstrual cycles have implications on work-related productivity; however, employer-sponsored menstrual health resources are widely unavailable. Actionable research-based evidence is needed to develop menstrual health programs that proactively help working females mitigate their hormonal-related symptoms and optimize their hormone profiles and work-related performance. This study sought to evaluate the prevalence and severity of hormonal-related symptoms and assess the directional impact of hormonal-related symptoms on work-related productivity across cyclical hormone phases.

Methods: A cross-sectional, descriptive questionnaire was used to measure hormonal-related symptoms and work-related productivity in 372 working females of reproductive age in the United States. The validated Menstrual Distress Questionnaire was used to measure the prevalence and severity of hormonal-related symptoms. The Menstrual Cycle-Related Work Productivity Questionnaire was modified and used to assess perceptions of work-related productivity measures across all cyclical hormone phases. Cumulative link mixed models and Bayesian adjacent category models were employed to determine the relationship between hormonal-related symptoms and work-related productivity, independent of age, body mass index (BMI), heavy bleeding experience, cyclical hormone phase, contraceptive use, Exos employment status and other hormonal-related symptoms.

Results: Hormonal-related symptoms were present across cyclical hormone phases, and the most severe disturbances were experienced during the bleed-phase. Distributions of perceived work productivity were significantly more negative during the pre-bleed and bleed phases and more positive during the late follicular and early luteal phases. Self-reported hormonal-related symptoms were significantly associated with perceptions of work-related productivity, independent of potential confounders.

Conclusions: Cyclical hormone fluctuations impact perceived work-related productivity variably by phase. Self-reported hormonal-related symptoms are associated with perceptions of work-related productivity. Our findings identify important considerations for the development of menstrual health programming to optimize the lived experience of female physiology in the workplace.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

一项评估与月经周期和工作场所生产力观念相关的症状影响的调查:对雇主赞助的月经健康计划的考虑。
背景:在自然或避孕药驱动的月经周期中经历的激素相关症状对工作效率有影响;然而,雇主赞助的经期保健资源普遍缺乏。需要可操作的基于研究的证据来制定月经健康计划,积极帮助职业女性减轻激素相关症状,优化她们的激素谱和工作表现。本研究旨在评估激素相关症状的患病率和严重程度,并评估激素相关症状在周期性激素阶段对工作效率的定向影响。方法:采用横断面描述性问卷,测量美国372名育龄工作女性的激素相关症状和工作效率。经验证的月经困扰问卷用于测量激素相关症状的患病率和严重程度。修改了与月经周期相关的工作效率问卷,并用于评估所有周期性激素阶段与工作有关的生产力措施的看法。采用累积链接混合模型和贝叶斯邻近类别模型来确定激素相关症状与工作效率之间的关系,而不受年龄、体重指数(BMI)、大出血经历、激素周期、避孕药使用、Exos就业状况和其他激素相关症状的影响。结果:激素相关症状出现在周期性激素期,最严重的紊乱发生在出血期。感知工作效率的分布在出血前期和出血期更为负,而在卵泡晚期和黄体早期更为正。自我报告的激素相关症状与工作效率的感知显著相关,独立于潜在的混杂因素。结论:周期性激素波动对感知工作效率的影响随阶段变化而变化。自我报告的激素相关症状与工作效率的感知有关。我们的研究结果确定了制定月经健康规划以优化工作场所女性生理生活体验的重要考虑因素。
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来源期刊
BMC Women's Health
BMC Women's Health OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY-
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
4.00%
发文量
444
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Women''s Health is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of the health and wellbeing of adolescent girls and women, with a particular focus on the physical, mental, and emotional health of women in developed and developing nations. The journal welcomes submissions on women''s public health issues, health behaviours, breast cancer, gynecological diseases, mental health and health promotion.
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